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Thomas Savage (died 1611) : ウィキペディア英語版
Thomas Savage (Shakespeare's trustee)

Thomas Savage (–1611) of Rufford, Lancashire, was a member of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths and one of the ten seacoal-meters in London. Together with William Leveson, he was one of two trustees used by the original shareholders of the Globe Theatre in the allocation of their shares in 1599. He was an associate of the actor and editor of the First Folio, John Heminges, and of John Jackson, both of whom were Shakespeare's trustees in the purchase of the Blackfriars Gatehouse. Savage amassed a considerable fortune, at the time of his death owning five houses in London and an inn called the George.
==Family==
Thomas Savage, born about 1552 in Rufford, Lancashire,〔.〕 was the son of Jeffry or Geoffrey Savage and Jenett or Janet Hesketh, who according to the parish register were married in the church at Croston on 9 August 1551.〔.〕 Savage may have had a younger brother, Peter Savage, and had at least one sister,〔.〕 as well as a female cousin, the widow of Thomas Hesketh of Rufford.〔

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